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Female Muslim students can now don hijab at Cambodian schools. (Google photo)
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CAIRO — Cambodian Muslim students will be allowed
to wear Islamic attire, including hijab, as of the new academic year
in October, reported the Phnom Penh Post daily on Friday, September
12.
"While students are supposed to wear white
shirts and blue trousers to school, Khmer Muslim students will be
allowed to wear traditional uniforms to school because we are open
minded about students believing in different religions," said
Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Education, Sport and Youth
Chey Chap.
Prime Minister Hun Sen pledged two months ago to
allow Muslim students to wear their Islamic attire at schools.
The decision will be effective when the new
academic year starts in October.
Previously, Muslim students, both boys and girls,
had to abide by a standard uniform determined by their schools,
usually comprises a shirt and a pair of trousers.
This had forced many Muslim students, particularly
girls, to abandon their studies.
Some schools were bending the rules to allow female
Muslim students to don headgear.
"At the moment Khmer Muslim students don't
wear their traditional clothes at school, but they still wear folded
scarves around their faces," said Dy Tep Kosal, the director of
Chea Sim Cham Reun Roth Secondary School, where Muslims make up nearly
40 percent of its students.
Hijab is an obligatory code of dress for Muslim
women.
Inclusive
The government decision drew cheering from
Cambodian Muslims.
"This shows that the government doesn't want
to discriminate against Muslim students and will show people that
there are a lot of Khmer Muslims within the education system,"
said Zakaryya Adam, Secretary of State at the Ministry of Cults and
Religion.
Abdulhalim Kasim, a Muslim student at Norton
University, said the decision comes in the right time for female
Muslim students.
"While it doesn't make any difference to me
because I am a man and can wear whatever Khmer students wear, girls
need to wear scarves over their faces," he said.
Kasim said the decision also has broader
implications.
"The fact that the government will allow us to
wear our traditional clothes means it accepts all religions [and] it
will make it easier for Khmer Muslims to study."
There are estimated 700,000 Muslims in Cambodia,
making up 5 percent of the country's 13 million population.
Cambodian Muslims are generally located in towns
and rural fishing villages on the banks of the Tonle Sap and Mekong
rivers and in Kampot Province in the south.